Nepticulidae, Opostegidae, Tischeriidae, Lyonetiidae)

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Nepticulidae, Opostegidae, Tischeriidae, Lyonetiidae) Records of mining Lepidoptera in Belgium with nine species new to the country (Nepticulidae, Opostegidae, Tischeriidae, Lyonetiidae) Erik J. van Nieukerken Abstract. Records of 56 species of mining Lepidoptera are given, mostly for Wallonia. Stigmella thuringiaca (Namur: Nismes, on Potentilla tabernaemontani), Ectoedemia arcuatella (Luxembourg, Namur, on Fragaria vesca) and Leucoptera lustratella (Luxembourg, Namur, on Hypericum perforatum) are reported new for Belgium on the basis of reared adults, Stigmella crataegella (Luxembourg: Belvaux, Crataegus monogyna), S. confusella (West Vlaanderen, Betula pubescens), Trifurcula subnitidella (Namur: Nismes, Lotus corniculatus), and Ectoedemia spinosella (Namur: Nismes, Prunus spinosa) are reported as new on the basis of vacated mines and Coptotriche heinemanni (on Agrimonia eupatoria) and C. gaunacella (on Prunus spinosa) are reported as new both from the province of Luxembourg: Torgny, each on the basis of a single larva and mine, of which rearing failed. In addition to these, 50 new provincial records are given, particularly for Liège, Luxembourg and Namur. The previous record of Ectoedemia agrimoniae is regarded to be in the province of Luxembourg, not Namur. Samenvatting. Dit artikel omvat waarnemingen en vangsten van 56 soorten minerende Lepidoptera, vooral uit Wallonië. Stigmella thuringiaca (Namen: Nismes, op Potentilla tabernaemontani), Ectoedemia arcuatella (Luxemburg, Namen, op Fragaria vesca) en Leucoptera lustratella (Luxemburg, Namen, op Hypericum perforatum) worden nieuw voor België gemeld op grond van gekweekte vlinders; Stigmella crataegella (Luxemburg: Belvaux, Crataegus monogyna), S. confusella (West Vlaanderen, Betula pubescens), Trifurcula subnitidella (Namen: Nismes, Lotus corniculatus), en Ectoedemia spinosella (Namen: Nismes, Prunus spinosa) worden nieuw voor België gemeld op grond van lege mijnen en Coptotriche heinemanni (op Agrimonia eupatoria) en C. gaunacella (op Prunus spinosa) worden beide nieuw voor België gemeld uit de provincie Luxemburg: Torgny, op grond van een enkele bladmijn en rups van elk, waarvan het kweken mislukte. Daarnaast worden 50 nieuwe provincievondsten vermeld, in het bijzonder voor Luik, Luxemburg and Namen. De vroegere vermelding van Ectoedemia agrimoniae wordt beschouwd betrekking te hebben op de provincie Luxemburg, en niet Namen. Résumé. Des données de 56 espèces de Lepidoptères mineurs sont fournies, notamment provenant de Wallonie. Stigmella thuringiaca (Namur: Nismes, sur Potentilla tabernaemontani), Ectoedemia arcuatella (Luxembourg, Namur, sur Fragaria vesca) et Leucoptera lustratella (Luxembourg, Namur, sur Hypericum perforatum) sont signalées de Belgique pour la première fois sur la base des adultes élevés, Stigmella crataegella (Luxembourg: Belvaux, Crataegus monogyna), S. confusella (Flandres Occidentale, Betula pubescens), Trifurcula subnitidella (Namur: Nismes, Lotus corniculatus), et Ectoedemia spinosella (Namur: Nismes, Prunus spinosa) sont signalés de Belgique sur la bases des mines vides et Coptotriche heinemanni (sur Agrimonia eupatoria) et C. gaunacella (sur Prunus spinosa) sont également signalés comme nouveaux, les deux provenant de Luxembourg: Torgny, sur base d’une seule mine et larve pour chacun; l’élevage des adultes n’a pas donné de résultat. De plus 50 données provinciales nouvelles sont fournies, particulièrement pour Liège, Luxembourg et Namur. Il est montré que la donnée ancienne de Ectoedemia agrimoniae sera attribuée à la province de Luxembourg, et non à Namur. Key words: Nepticulidae – Opostegidae – Tischeriidae – Lyonetiidae – faunistics – hostplants. Nieukerken, E. J. van, Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum Naturalis, Postbus 9517, NL-2300 RA Leiden ([email protected]). Phegea 34 (4) (1.XII.2006): 125 Introduction Despite the increased interest for the study of Microlepidoptera in Belgium, as shown in the pages of this journal and the recent checklists (De Prins 1998, De Prins & Steeman 2006), the knowledge for most leafmining Lepidoptera is still relatively poor, particularly when compared with The Netherlands. Recently the family Gracillariidae has received more interest than the other families, but few papers deal with Nepticulidae, Opostegidae, Tischeriidae or Lyonetiidae. The last species recorded as new for Belgium in the Belgian literature were Stigmella zelleriella (Snellen, 1875) (Henderickx 1983), Pseudopostega auritella (Hübner, 1813) (De Prins 1989), Leucoptera lotella (Stainton, 1858) (Coenen 1994) and Lyonetia prunifoliella (Hübner, 1796) (De Prins 2003). The total numbers of species known of these families are also lower than for The Netherlands, respectively 64 and 83 for Nepticulidae, 4 and 6 for Tischeriidae and 7 and 8 for Lyonetiidae. On the level of the provinces the knowledge is distributed unevenly: most recent records are known from the province of Antwerp, whereas Brabant has many records, but almost all prior to 1980. Almost all other provinces are poorly covered. In the course of the years I collected several times in Belgium, usually incidental records during short holidays, in two cases on short but intensive collecting trips to Wallonia, particularly visiting limestone grasslands (in 1999 with Jin Tao and in 2002 with Kees van den Berg). Because of the relative poor knowledge, particularly for Wallonia, I present here all my records, except for the better known Gracillariidae. Willem Ellis (Zoological Museum Amsterdam) collected leafmines in the last years during various trips to Belgium; he was so kind to allow me to publish all his records as well. Nine species are recorded for the first time from Belgium: 6 Nepticulidae, 2 Tischeriidae and 1 Lyonetiidae. Material and methods Most material collected is in the collection of the National Museum of Natural History Naturalis, Leiden (RMNH), but some material collected by me and co-workers before 1984 and the material collected by Willem Ellis is in the Zoological Museum of Amsterdam (ZMAN). Both leafmines and reared adults are kept, and some samples of larvae, including tissue for DNA research (collected from 1999 on). Records of vacated mines are only used when they can unequivocally be identified to species. This precludes the records of vacated mines of Stigmella on Rosa, Rubus, Quercus, and several Rosaceous herbs, which too often cannot be identified with certainty, with the exclusion of Stigmella basiguttella on Quercus and S. aeneofasciella on Rosaceae. With larvae such mines may be identifiable by any of the following methods: rearing of adults, morphology of larva (after making microscopic preparation) or DNA. The photographs of leafmines are HR scans from colour slides, taken with a Zeiss microcamera attached to a Carl Zeiss SV11 Stereomicroscope, photographs of adults were taken with the Zeiss AxioCam attached to the same Phegea 34 (4) (1.XII.2006): 126 microscope, those of genitalia with the AxioCam attached to a Zeiss Axioskop, using Zeiss AxioVision 3.0 software. In the material lists I provide the 1×1 km UTM grid references. Several of the cited records here from Liège and Limburg have been used in the catalogues by De Prins (1998) and De Prins & Steeman (2006) and are thus shown there by black dots or red circles respectively; here these records are published for the first time in detail. For information on the distribution over the provinces I refer to the online checklist (De Prins & Steeman 2006), the latest update on 28 March 2006. Identification All Nepticulidae and Opostegidae found in Belgium can be identified with Johansson et al. (1990), and for the Nepticulidae also Laštůvka & Laštůvka (1997) is available, but the colour plates make the first book superior. For the Tischeriidae there are no recent complete treatments, De Prins & Steeman (2006) cites several older sources. For the genus Leucoptera in Lyonetiidae, the best source is Mey (1994), and Emmet (1985) as general key for the family. For leafmines of all families much information and good photographs can be found in two websites of neighbouring countries: Ellis (2005) and Edmunds (2006). List of abbreviations In the material lists the provinces are abbreviated following the same system as in De Prins (1998) and De Prins & Steeman (2006). AN= Antwerpen (Antwerp), CvdB = C. (Kees) van den Berg (Leiden); EvN = Erik J. van Nieukerken; GB = Georgina Bryan, Amsterdam (to 1983); JC = J. Cronau (student Amsterdam in 1983), LG = Liège; LI = Limburg; LX = Luxembourg; NA = Namur; TJ = Jin Tao (Leiden, 1999–2000); TM = tenanted mines (with larvae or pupae); VM = vacated mines; WE = Willem Ellis (Amsterdam); WV = West-Vlaanderen. Nepticulidae Stigmella lapponica (Wocke, 1862) LG: Spa N, Parc, 250–300 m, GR0397, 23.x.2000, Betula pendula, 1VM, EvN. – LX: Bois d’Etalles, 27.viii.2002, B. pubescens, VM, WE. New for Liège and Luxembourg. This common species has been recorded remarkably seldom from Belgium (AN and LI only). Detailed search for mines in summer will undoubtedly result in many new records for this and the following species. Stigmella confusella (Wood & Walsingham, 1894) New for Belgium OV: Retranchement, de Vrede (Dutch border), ES2688, 16.x.2003, Betula pubescens, VM, WE. It is remarkable that this species had not been recorded earlier from Belgium, although it usually occurs almost as common as S. lapponica. These two species are easier to identify as leafmine than as adult (Johansson et al. 1990). Phegea 34 (4) (1.XII.2006): 127 Stigmella tiliae (Frey, 1856) LG: Malmédy, center, 330 m, KA8890, 26.x.2000, Tilia europaea, VM,
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